If you want to use your home network to watch porn, Cisco is O.K. with that.

After a major uproar over a new cloud service for its home routers, the company has changed its terms of service completely. The new terms no longer mention porn or a bunch of other things that Cisco originally forbade.

Last week, Cisco sent out an upgrade to the software that makes its routers work, called firmware. The upgrade affected two models, the EA4500 and the EA2700. Cisco moved them to its "Cisco Connect Cloud" service. This software does things like let you set up a password for the device, or otherwise tinker with it.

That led people to wonder -- was the router watching what people were doing on the Internet and reporting it back to Cisco? Would Cisco turn off your router if it caught you watching porn, sending out e-mail advertisements for your business, or voicing support for an act of civil disobedience?

Cisco had earlier apologized for the confusion and deleted a portion of a privacy statement that said Cisco would keep track of Connect Cloud customers’ “network traffic” and “Internet history," ExtremeTech reported.